Den rebellkontrollerade staden Douma utanför Damaskus under vapenvilans första dag. (SAMEER AL-DOUMY / AFP)

Uppgifter: Flygbomber mot sju byar under vapenvilan

Det oppositionella Syriska människorättsobservatoriet uppger att stridsplan, troligtvis ryska eller syriska, har bombat sju byar i provinserna Aleppo och Hama, rapporterar AFP.
Det var inledningsvis oklart om de bombade områdena ingår i överenskommelsen om eldupphör, som gäller en liten del av territoriet och utesluter jihadistgrupper som IS och Nusrafronten.
Syriska människorättsobservatoriets chef Rami Abdel Rahman uppger att bara en av byarna kontrolleras av Nusrafronten och att de andra kontrolleras av icke-jihadistiska grupper.
Oppositionen i Syrien uppger att vapenvilan bröts 15 gånger under lördagen av syriska regimen och dess allierade.

bakgrund
 
Syriska människorättsobservatoriet
Wikipedia (en)
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (also known as SOHR; Arabic: المرصد السوري لحقوق الإنسان‎) founded in May 2006 is an information office documenting human rights abuses in Syria, since 2011 focusing on the Syrian Civil War. The SOHR is frequently quoted by major news media since the beginning of the uprising, such as Voice of America, Reuters, BBC, CNN and National Public Radio, about daily numbers of ISIL/ISIS fighters and civilians killed in airstrikes in Syria. The United Kingdom-based SOHR is run out of a two-bedroom terraced home in Coventry by Rami Abdulrahman, a Syrian Sunni Muslim who also runs a clothes shop. After being imprisoned three times in Syria, Abdulrahman fled to the United Kingdom fearing a fourth jail term. The New York Times in April 2013 described him being on the phone all day every day with contacts in Syria, and checking all information himself. Born Osama Suleiman, he adopted a pseudonym during his years of activism in Syria, and has used it publicly ever since. In a December 2011 interview with Reuters, Abdulrahman said the observatory has a network of 200 people and that six of his sources had been killed. Abdulrahman reports on events in the Syrian uprising, including the deaths of civilians, rebels and army defectors (whom he calls "martyrs") and government soldiers. In a 2015 interview with RT, Abdulrahman stated that the last time he visited Syria was in the year 2000.
Omni är politiskt obundna och oberoende. Vi strävar efter att ge fler perspektiv på nyheterna. Har du frågor eller synpunkter kring vår rapportering? Kontakta redaktionen